This statement applies to The Global Health Network’s website, this includes the online research tools and digital hubs for communities of practice hosted on the website; https://tghn.org.
The Global Health Network (“TGHN”) is a collaborative project involving research organisations from all over the world.
The website was established to achieve TGHN’s aim to facilitate collaboration and resource sharing for health research. The Global Health Network enables easier, faster, and better research in the world’s most challenging settings. The website operates as a network, hosting digital hubs for communities of practice that focus on specific therapeutic areas and research issues. This website is run by The Global Health Network team at the University of Oxford and includes content that is crowd-sourced or provided by collaborators.
The University of Oxford (the “University”) is currently acting as the coordinator for the site infrastructure, some digital hubs are coordinated by TGHN, others are coordinated by a TGHN collaborator. Here’s a list of all digital knowledge hubs hosted on TGHN. This accessibility statement has been updated in accordance to University guidance and based upon the European Union Web Accessibility Directive.
The Global Health Network and University of Oxford are committed to providing an accessible web presence that gives members of the public and our community full access to information offered publicly through the platform.
In order to ensure all of our visitors can use our website these pages aim to meet Level-AA standard of WCAG 2.1. This includes elements such as:
AbilityNet has advice on making your devices easier to use if you have a disability. In addition, major operating systems produce the following guidance:
We are aware that some parts of our website are not fully accessible. These include:
We are working to address areas where our accessibility needs improvement. Please see the known issues section for more details.
If you need information on this website in a different format, or wish to report a problem not listed on this page, please contact The Global Health Network digital team:
Email: info@theglobalhealthnetwork.org
We will consider your request and respond within 14 days.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is responsible for enforcing the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018 (the ‘accessibility regulations’). If you’re not happy with how we respond to your complaint, contact the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS)
The Global Health Network and University of Oxford is committed to making its website accessible, in accordance with the Public Sector Bodies (Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations 2018.
This website is partially compliant with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines version 2.1 AA standard. Partial compliance is due to the non-compliance listed in the Known issues section and exemptions noted in the Disproportionate burden section.
Following a basic accessibility audit conducted September 2020 we are aware of the following issues:
The Global Health Network has been providing high quality, free to access content in line with our mission of enabling easier, faster, and better research in the world’s most challenging settings since 2010. The network was established to allow both resources to be shared by the central team as well as by our collaborating partners. The site operates as a network, hosting digital knowledge hubs for communities of practice focusing on specific therapeutic areas and research issues. Some of the site’s services may provide you with settings to narrow the scope of use granted to the University. Collaborative workspaces provide an area on the site for users to selectively share contributions and develop collaborative projects.
Content contributed by our collaborators via their own spaces on this site or submissions via our user base may not have always met the required accessibility standards. This combined with the scale of this legacy site means we cannot apply updates to all existing legacy content. We will therefore take a pragmatic approach in making all new content as accessible as possible, whilst focusing our efforts on updating page templates and contributor guidance to ensure a better standard of accessibility going forward. Legacy content is preserved as a useful record and archive to help guide future research projects. We may where possible update this legacy content on a case-by-case basis.
Documents that are essential to the service we provide will either be converted to HTML pages or replaced with accessible versions by September 2021.
Our site includes third party content and functionality. This may direct you to a related service, link to another site or supporting documentation. We are not responsible for the accessibility of third-party content or to other sites we link to.
This includes but is not exclusive to:
We will endeavour to make content we supply and control on third party platforms meet accessibility requirements; however, we are not responsible for the accessibility of the platform itself.
The accessibility regulations do not require us to fix PDFs or other documents published before 23 September 2018 if they are not essential to providing our services such as an explanatory document on how to sign up to the network.
However, we will aim to ensure any new documents we publish are accessible.
This site has pre-recorded audio and video content that was published before 23 September 2020, which is exempt from the accessibility regulations.
This site contains archived content, which is exempt from the accessibility regulations published before 23 September 2020.
We want to provide the best experience possible for all our website visitors. To achieve this we will:
This statement was prepared on 17 September 2020.
This website was tested over a couple of days leading up to 11 September 2020. The test was carried out by The Global Health Network team using a carefully chosen sample of pages and content types.
The pages were checked using WebAim’s Web Accessibility Evaluation Tool and manually following the UK governments basic accessibility check guidelines and WCAG 2.1 Primer Checklist
We tested:
Global Research Nurses Home Page
EDCTP Knowledge Hub Protocol Development Toolkit
Epidemics Ethics Registration Page
Epidemics Ethics Resources Page
Intergrowth-21st Standards and Tools
Professional Development Scheme
The Global Health Training Centre Course